Fire breaks out at Scotland’s Glasgow School of Art for second time

Local residents were being evacuated from their homes with the glow from the blaze visible across the city centre.

The rear elevation of the Glasgow School of Art on fire, in Glasgow, Scotland, Britain. (Reuters photo)

Fire ripped through one of the world’s top art schools early on Saturday as the historic building in the Scottish city of Glasgow was undergoing major restoration work following another blaze four years ago.

Smoke and flames billowed from the Glasgow School of Art as firefighters rushed to tackle the blaze which began at around 11:20pm (2220 GMT) on Friday.

There were no casualties, the fire service said.

First minister Nicola Sturgeon said her heart “breaks for Glasgow’s beloved” art school, which is housed in one of Scotland’s most cherished buildings. “This is clearly an extremely serious situation,” she said.

Local residents were being evacuated from their homes with the glow from the blaze visible across the city centre, witnesses told Press Association.

The news agency said the fire had spread to a nearby campus and a nightclub.

The fire broke out four years after another blaze tore through the art school in May 2014, badly damaging the building which was designed by architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh.

This fire ‘much worse’

Eyewitnesses told the BBC the fire looked “much worse” than the last one.

Iain Bushell, deputy chief officer for Scottish Fire and Rescue Service, told the broadcaster that efforts to bring the fire under control are expected to be “prolonged” with firefighters facing “an extremely challenging and complex incident”.

Firefighters attend to a blaze at the Mackintosh Building at the Glasgow School of Art.
(Reuters photo)

Writing on Twitter, Paul Sweeney, a Glasgow MP, said he was “devastated that a major fire has broken out at the Glasgow School of Art tonight”.

“It looks like the entire interior space is now fully alight. The best we can probably hope for is structural facade retention and a complete rebuild of the interior.”

Mackintosh, a Glasgow-born architect and designer (1868-1928), was a leading exponent of Art Nouveau, whose distinctive lines and lettering remain influential.

He won a competition to design the building in 1897 and it took around 10 years to complete. It is now a landmark in the city with special government-protected status.